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His major created roles in Ashtons works include Oberon, Beliaev
in Ashtons A Month in the Country, Troyte in Enigma
Variations, and Lo Straniero in Varii Capricci. For Kenneth
MacMillan, he created Des Grieux in Manon, Benvolio in Romeo
and Juliet, Kchessinskas partner in Anastasia, the
Boy in Triad and Autumn in The Four Seasons. He also created
the Boy with Matted Hair in Antony Tudors Shadowplay, Prospero
in Nureyevs The Tempest and the leading role in Hans van
Manens Four Schumann Pieces, for which he was the inspiration.
Roles in which he was particularly praised include the leads in Ashtons
La Fille Mal Gardée, Cinderella, Daphnis and
Chloë and Symphonic Variations; MasMillans Song of
the Earth and Romeo and Juliet; La Bayadère,
Jerome Robbins Dances at a Gathering and In the Night
and Balanchines Agon. In the late 1970s he danced with both The Royal Ballet and American
Ballet Theatre in New York where his extensive repertory included the
role of Solor in the first performances of Natalia Makarovas production
of La Bayadère. In 1979 he took the speaking part of the Narrator in Ashtons
A Wedding Bouquet for The Joffrey Ballet, a role he was later
to repeat for The Royal Ballet. During The Royal Ballets 50th
Anniversary Celebrations in 1981 he danced the title role in Helpmanns
Hamlet which had been especially revived for the season, and danced
the leading male role in Rhapsody, a role created by Ashton for Baryshnikov
in 1980. In the Autumn of 1982 he participated in two productions that made
up a triple bill at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York, in celebration
of the birth of Igor Stravinsky; for Frederick Ashton he created the
role of the Fisherman, with Makarova as the Nightingale, in Le Rossignol
and he also took the part of the Narrator in the composers Oedipus
Rex. In September 1986 he was appointed Director of The Royal Ballet, post
he held until August 2001, having become Assistant to the Director in
September 1984 and Associate Director in 1985. His first production
for the company was Swan Lake which received its world premiere in March
1987. The Sleeping Beauty was premiered in April 1994 at the Kennedy
Center in Washington, D. C. and was subsequently seen in New York, prior
to its London premiere in November of the same year. This version of
the ballet has also been filmed for television and video release with
Dowell as Carabosse. He has designed costumes himself for other works
including Robbins In the Night, Ashtons Thaïs and,
most recently, The Royal Ballets productions of Balanchines
Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux and Symphony in C. Dowell continues
to appear on stage in some roles, including Carabosse in The Sleeping
Beauty. In December 1989 he created the mime role of the aged Emperor
in Kenneth MacMillans the Prince of the Pagodas and, in
February 1991, the role of Mashas husband, Kulygin, in MacMillans
Winter Dreams; both were subsequently recorded for television
and video. He appeared in the title role of William Tucketts television
ballet, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and, in July 1995, narrated
Matthew Harts new version of Peter and the Wolf, created
for students of The Royal Ballet School, in which he also played the
Grandfather. In December 1999 he created the role of Drosselmeyer in
Peter Wrights revised version of The Nutcracker. In 1972 he was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire
(CBE) in the Queens Birthday Honours List, the youngest dancer
ever to be so honored. In 1995, he was created a Knight Bachelor in
the Queens Birthday Honours List and presented with the Royal
Academy of Dancings Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Award for 1994.
This staging of The Dream is Dowells first work for American Ballet
Theatre. |